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Acetylcholine-producing T cells in the intestine regulate antimicrobial peptide expression and microbial diversity. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway reduces systemic tumor necrosis factor (TNF) through acetylcholine-producing memory T cells found in the spleen and intestine, where their role was previously unclear.
  • Research utilized ChAT-enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) reporter mice to analyze T cells in both mouse and human intestines, revealing that most ChAT-expressing T cells resemble Th17 cells and coexpress cytokines like IL17A and IL22.
  • CD4-specific ChAT-deficient mice demonstrated decreased levels of antimicrobial peptides in the intestine, suggesting that ChAT-expressing T cells help regulate microbial environment and host defense in the gut.

Article Abstract

The cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway reduces systemic tumor necrosis factor (TNF) via acetylcholine-producing memory T cells in the spleen. These choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)-expressing T cells are also found in the intestine, where their function is unclear. We aimed to characterize these cells in mouse and human intestine and delineate their function. We made use of the ChAT-enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) reporter mice. CD4 mice were crossed to ChAT mice to achieve specific deletion of ChAT in CD4 T cells. We observed that the majority of ChAT-expressing T cells in the human and mouse intestine have characteristics of Th17 cells and coexpress IL17A, IL22, and RORC The generation of ChAT-expressing T cells was skewed by dendritic cells after activation of their adrenergic receptor β To evaluate ChAT T cell function, we generated CD4-specific ChAT-deficient mice. CD4ChAT mice showed a reduced level of epithelial antimicrobial peptides lysozyme, defensin A, and ang4, which was associated with an enhanced bacterial diversity and richness in the small intestinal lumen in CD4ChAT mice. We conclude that ChAT-expressing T cells in the gut are stimulated by adrenergic receptor activation on dendritic cells. ChAT-expressing T cells may function to mediate the host AMP secretion, microbial growth and expansion.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.00114.2016DOI Listing

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